
Dear Editor,
ON OR ABOUT about January 28 an alleged Australian Expat viciously murdered a 17 year old girl in a small Dipolog city Hotel. Her body was found two days later by hotel staff.
When I say alleged, I refer to his name and appearance. Ali is not a name used by Australians, it is a Middle Eastern name, as in Muslim, also his appearance is Arab. Also he was the leader of a prison gang called “Taliban” so need I say more? He is not an Australian he is a Muslim with an Australian Passport.
He was tracked to and arrested by police in Dumaguete city on the neighbouring Island of Negros and returned to Dipolog City to be charged with first degree murder.
This is one of the most brutal murders in many years committed in both the Philippines and Australia.
What one Newspaper had to say about it:
Quote from GMA Philippine News:
Her face was so unrecognizable and horribly disfigured, the mortician had a hard time,” police investigator Ronald Dingas told AFP.
“She suffered a very brutal death. It’s too much.”
The victim had deep head wounds, had lost most of her teeth, and suffered a brain haemorrhage which ultimately led to her death by acute respiratory failure, Dingas said, citing a police autopsy.
She was naked, and investigators also found sex toys and marijuana in the room.
It seems as if he tried to force her to have oral sex with him; maybe she retaliated by biting him. So he flew into a rage and beat her to death. He claims he hit her with a shoe, yeah, right! But he forgot to add that he still had his foot in it. He stomped down so hard on her head that he crushed it causing her eyeballs to pop out and smashed out her teeth.
The suspect said he also thought the victim was a transgender, so what! Is that a crime worth killing someone for? Also he claimed that he killed her in self defence. What Bullshit is that? A 5-ft 2-in 45-kg girl savagely attacked him, come on? Hey! I saw the photo of her head. (Subsequently removed due to its horrid nature.
Totally beyond words to describe) this animal is right out of this world in his treatment of his fellow beings. The treatment that he dished out to that poor girl is only what we have come to expect from Radical type Muslims as perfectly demonstrated by the barbaric behaviour committed by members of ISIS, such as burning that poor Jordanian Pilot alive in a cage. They have utterly no respect for females, only contempt.
Now to some of the violent past of Mr Ali – Ali:
Quote from Melbourne’s Sun Herald Newspaper:
A BRUTAL Melbourne criminal under suspicion for a jailhouse killing has been arrested over the murder of a teenage girl in the Philippines.
At the time of his jail release, Ali was a suspect in the 2011 fatal bashing of Colin Johnson at Fulham Prison in Gippsland Victoria Australia.
Mr Johnson was beaten savagely, possibly with a rolling pin, and died after weeks on life support.
Witnesses were too scared to help police.
Ali, the former leader of a prison gang called Taliban, had at that stage been in custody over the horrific bashing of Melbourne Custody Centre inmate Michael Tully in 1999.
Mr Tully, who was in custody for minor crimes, suffered severe brain damage when Ali stomped on his head.
He died of heart failure three years later but, by then, Ali could not be charged over the death.
Ali was convicted over the killing for the third time in 2007 and sentenced to 15 years jail with a minimum term of 12.
If he is handed over to Australia for Punishment, he will face an Australian court. Now we all know how lenient Australian Judges are on such people.
Another Except from the Sydney Morning Herald.
When Ali was sentenced to 15 years jail in 2007 – after three trials – Michael Tully’s brother Rodney wept outside the Supreme Court.
Ali had spat on Mr Tully and wrongly accused him of being a paedophile before he stomped on him until he lay bleeding on the cell floor. The court found Ali was not remorseful.
Mr Tully was left unable to walk or talk after the bashing. He had been moved to the 3.7 metre and 3.1 metre cell from a psychiatric hospital after being charged with an armed robbery that netted cigarettes and $20.
Rodney Tully said he was sickened that Ali had been released, as it was only a matter of time before he ruined another life.
“I knew he had been due to be released pretty soon, and it gave me a chill down my spine.
“Learning what I have today doesn’t surprise me. He demonstrated what sort of a man he was by what he did to my brother.
“There was always going to be someone who crossed paths with him and triggered him to just go off again.”
A former police officer who once charged Ali with a serious crime said it was inevitable he would offend again.
“It is a great shame that there is a 17-year-old girl deceased and someone who showed no remorse is arrested for another tragic crime.”
Justice Elizabeth Curtain told Ali during sentencing “your assault was so extreme even experienced criminals were sickened by your conduct” and gave evidence to see justice done. One prisoner later saw Ali “crowing” as if “happy with his work”, a witness said.
Justice Curtain said she did not regard Ali’s prospects for rehabilitation “as at all likely”.
In 2010, Ali sought leave to appeal his sentence. The Court of Appeal heard he had been raised in Marrickville in Sydney. He left school in year 10 for a job on the railways and then as an Australia Post mail officer. His family moved to Melbourne and Ali worked with his uncle managing a convenience store in North Melbourne.
His application to appeal was unsuccessful.
“The attack was unprovoked. The victim had a simple manner and appeared vulnerable. The applicant attacked him in order to punish him for a disposition imagined by the applicant,” Justice Robert Buchanan wrote.
“The attack was extremely violent and sustained. The victim offered no resistance and suffered a severe brain injury, which effectively ruined his life. Clearly the offence itself called for condign punishment.”
Justice Buchanan agreed with Justice Curtain that Ali’s prospects of rehabilitation were slim.
“It was apparent from her sentencing remarks that [Justice Curtain] … had regard to other circumstances than the plea in canvassing the question of rehabilitation, not least the applicant’s extensive criminal record, his conduct in prison and the observations of the psychiatrist and the psychologist and the applicant’s failure to take any meaningful steps to effect his rehabilitation save in the months before sentence.
“In my opinion the sentencing judge did not err in her estimate of the applicant’s prospects of rehabilitation.”
This animal should not be allowed to live. The local news claims that if convicted he would face up to 15 years in jail. Now, we all know how easy it seems for some people to get out of Philippine jails, escape or bribe. This animal will find a way out if he is ever sent to jail. He will get out and some little girl going about her innocent life will be his next victim; to face exactly what happened to that that poor girl in that Dipolog hotel room last week.
Mervyn Penny
A very angry Australian resident of Dipolog City